The Pac-12 media picked Utah to finish third in the South Division. Four media members (out of 42 total) voted Utah first in the division. The media picked
USC to finish first, but USC will be ineligible for the inaugural
Pac-12 Championship Game due to NCAA sanctions.
Arizona State came in second, and
Arizona,
UCLA, and
Colorado finished fourth, fifth, and sixth, respectively, in the South Division voting. The media also picked
Oregon to win the North Division with 29 first place votes, and to win the Pac-12 Championship Game and thus be the Pac-12 Champion.[19]
Coaching changes
Kyle Whittingham made a few changes to his coaching staff for the 2011 season. Prior to Utah's appearance in the
2010 Maaco Bowl Las Vegasdefensive line coach
John Pease retired from coaching.[20] During the offseason, Whittingham replaced Pease with Chad Kauhaʻahaʻa, a second team all-
WAC defensive lineman for Utah in
1996. The previous two seasons he had been the defensive line coach for
Utah State.[21]
The Utes also hired
Norm Chow to be the
Offensive coordinator and coach the
tight ends.[21] He had been an offensive coordinator at
UCLA the three previous seasons.[22] In
2002, when he was the offensive coordinator at USC, Norm Chow won the
Broyles Award.[23] Former co-offensive coordinators
Aaron Roderick and
Dave Schramm were reassigned to coach different positions in the offense. They will coach the
receivers and the
running backs, respectively, positions they have both previously coached for the program.[21] Finally, Whittingham hired
Tim Davis to coach the
offensive line. Davis replaces Blake Miller who left the program to coach the same position with
Memphis. Davis coached the offensive line the previous three seasons at
Minnesota and has had a prior stint as Utah's offensive line coach
1990–
1996 and worked under Chow at USC
2002–
2004.[24]
During the 2010 offseason, Utah successfully negotiated to join the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) for all sports, including football.[25] Utah, along with
Colorado, officially joined the Pac-10 on July 1, 2011 to form the
Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12).[26] The previous 12 seasons, Utah competed in the
Mountain West Conference.
Game summaries
Montana State
Montana State at Utah
1
2
3
4
Total
Bobcats
0
7
0
3
10
• Utes
17
7
3
0
27
Date: September 1
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Game start: 6:07 pm
Elapsed time: 2:49
Game attendance: 45,311
Game weather: 80°, Sunny and Clear, winds NW 8 mph
Referee: Jay Stricherz
TV announcers (KJZZ): Steve Brown, Mike Norseth, and David Locke
Utah played Montana State for the 10th time on September 1. Entering the game, Utah had beaten Montana State in all of their nine games, all but one of which have been played in Salt Lake City. During those nine contests, the Utes outscored the Bobcats 455–25.[28][29]
Utah once again beat Montana State in their 2011 meeting. Utah built a 24–0 lead with a little less than 12 minutes remaining in the second quarter, and then scored 3 points the rest of the game to win 27–10.[2] The Utes finished with 101 passing yards on 15-of-23 passing by
quarterback Jordan Wynn.
Running backJohn White finished with 150 yards rushing to lead the Utes.[30]
Linebacker Brian Blechen set-up Utah's first
touchdown when he returned an interception 39-yards to the 8-yard line; Montana State quarterback DeNarius McGhee threw the errant pass. Three plays later, Wynn connected with
wide receiver DeVonte Christopher for the touchdown. Montana State punted on their next possession, and Utah's offense had its second scoring drive. This one resulted in a 5-yard touchdown pass from Wynn to White; the drive took nine plays and gained 62 yards.[30]
Utah blocked MSU's next punt. Montana State blockers flipped Utah lineback Matt Martinez into the air, which caused Martinez to block the punt with his feet.[31] The ensuing Utah possession resulted in a
field goal; kicker Coleman Petersen successfully booted a 37-yard attempt. Following Montana State's third punt of the game, Utah had a nine-play, 59-yard touchdown drive for their last touchdown of the evening. Montana State scored their only touchdown of the evening with 35 seconds remaining in the first half. McGhee passed to receiver Tanner Bleskin for a 7-yard touchdown reception.[30] Each team only scored a field goal in the second half for the final 27–10 score.[2]
USC
Utah at USC
1
2
3
4
Total
Utes
0
7
7
0
14
• Trojans
10
0
7
6
23
Date: September 10
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Game start: 5:37 pm
Elapsed time: 3:17
Game attendance: 73,821
Game weather: 72°, Hazy, winds S 5 mph
Referee: Jack Folliard
TV announcers (Versus): Ted Robinson, Glenn Parker, and Akbar Gbaja-Biamila
TV announcers (CSN-BA, KJZZ; ESPN Radio): Roxy Bernstein, Mike Pawlawski, and Chris Townsend (CSN-BA, KJZZ); Bill Rosinski, David Norrie, and Joe Schad (ESPN Radio)
The Pac-12 media picked Utah to finish third in the South Division. Four media members (out of 42 total) voted Utah first in the division. The media picked
USC to finish first, but USC will be ineligible for the inaugural
Pac-12 Championship Game due to NCAA sanctions.
Arizona State came in second, and
Arizona,
UCLA, and
Colorado finished fourth, fifth, and sixth, respectively, in the South Division voting. The media also picked
Oregon to win the North Division with 29 first place votes, and to win the Pac-12 Championship Game and thus be the Pac-12 Champion.[19]
Coaching changes
Kyle Whittingham made a few changes to his coaching staff for the 2011 season. Prior to Utah's appearance in the
2010 Maaco Bowl Las Vegasdefensive line coach
John Pease retired from coaching.[20] During the offseason, Whittingham replaced Pease with Chad Kauhaʻahaʻa, a second team all-
WAC defensive lineman for Utah in
1996. The previous two seasons he had been the defensive line coach for
Utah State.[21]
The Utes also hired
Norm Chow to be the
Offensive coordinator and coach the
tight ends.[21] He had been an offensive coordinator at
UCLA the three previous seasons.[22] In
2002, when he was the offensive coordinator at USC, Norm Chow won the
Broyles Award.[23] Former co-offensive coordinators
Aaron Roderick and
Dave Schramm were reassigned to coach different positions in the offense. They will coach the
receivers and the
running backs, respectively, positions they have both previously coached for the program.[21] Finally, Whittingham hired
Tim Davis to coach the
offensive line. Davis replaces Blake Miller who left the program to coach the same position with
Memphis. Davis coached the offensive line the previous three seasons at
Minnesota and has had a prior stint as Utah's offensive line coach
1990–
1996 and worked under Chow at USC
2002–
2004.[24]
During the 2010 offseason, Utah successfully negotiated to join the Pacific-10 Conference (Pac-10) for all sports, including football.[25] Utah, along with
Colorado, officially joined the Pac-10 on July 1, 2011 to form the
Pac-12 Conference (Pac-12).[26] The previous 12 seasons, Utah competed in the
Mountain West Conference.
Game summaries
Montana State
Montana State at Utah
1
2
3
4
Total
Bobcats
0
7
0
3
10
• Utes
17
7
3
0
27
Date: September 1
Location: Salt Lake City, UT
Game start: 6:07 pm
Elapsed time: 2:49
Game attendance: 45,311
Game weather: 80°, Sunny and Clear, winds NW 8 mph
Referee: Jay Stricherz
TV announcers (KJZZ): Steve Brown, Mike Norseth, and David Locke
Utah played Montana State for the 10th time on September 1. Entering the game, Utah had beaten Montana State in all of their nine games, all but one of which have been played in Salt Lake City. During those nine contests, the Utes outscored the Bobcats 455–25.[28][29]
Utah once again beat Montana State in their 2011 meeting. Utah built a 24–0 lead with a little less than 12 minutes remaining in the second quarter, and then scored 3 points the rest of the game to win 27–10.[2] The Utes finished with 101 passing yards on 15-of-23 passing by
quarterback Jordan Wynn.
Running backJohn White finished with 150 yards rushing to lead the Utes.[30]
Linebacker Brian Blechen set-up Utah's first
touchdown when he returned an interception 39-yards to the 8-yard line; Montana State quarterback DeNarius McGhee threw the errant pass. Three plays later, Wynn connected with
wide receiver DeVonte Christopher for the touchdown. Montana State punted on their next possession, and Utah's offense had its second scoring drive. This one resulted in a 5-yard touchdown pass from Wynn to White; the drive took nine plays and gained 62 yards.[30]
Utah blocked MSU's next punt. Montana State blockers flipped Utah lineback Matt Martinez into the air, which caused Martinez to block the punt with his feet.[31] The ensuing Utah possession resulted in a
field goal; kicker Coleman Petersen successfully booted a 37-yard attempt. Following Montana State's third punt of the game, Utah had a nine-play, 59-yard touchdown drive for their last touchdown of the evening. Montana State scored their only touchdown of the evening with 35 seconds remaining in the first half. McGhee passed to receiver Tanner Bleskin for a 7-yard touchdown reception.[30] Each team only scored a field goal in the second half for the final 27–10 score.[2]
USC
Utah at USC
1
2
3
4
Total
Utes
0
7
7
0
14
• Trojans
10
0
7
6
23
Date: September 10
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Game start: 5:37 pm
Elapsed time: 3:17
Game attendance: 73,821
Game weather: 72°, Hazy, winds S 5 mph
Referee: Jack Folliard
TV announcers (Versus): Ted Robinson, Glenn Parker, and Akbar Gbaja-Biamila
TV announcers (CSN-BA, KJZZ; ESPN Radio): Roxy Bernstein, Mike Pawlawski, and Chris Townsend (CSN-BA, KJZZ); Bill Rosinski, David Norrie, and Joe Schad (ESPN Radio)